Bitwarden for the general stuff. Keepass for the sensitive stuff
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If you use them consciously, they are an incredible help. I have been using them for more than 15 years without problems, I have been using Bitwarden for about 5 years now and it is by far the best.
Good. Used keepass for years, also useful for storing other confidential info. Put the app & vault in one cloud storage, key file in another and you’re synced across multiple computers, add an app for your phone and you’re good to go and surely reasonable secure providing you use a long password too.
Yes yes yes and here is a tip so even if your account got hacked you are still safe, when you generate a password put that into your password manager but have a word in your mind and when you are making an account or changing password put that word that you had in your mind in the end of your password, you just need one word to memorize and that's it (sorry for my bad English)
I used KeePass for ages, but I could never get my wife to use it, too. Updating and using and synching it wasn't a big hassle, but it was enough of one to let my wife reject it, especially with plugins that needed updating. Another issue we had was that sharing passwords wasn't really convenient. I set up a Vaultwarden instance on our server and now she's happily using the password manager (finally!) and we can have an "oganization" to share passwords with. Really cool stuff. Besides, we ain't needing and plugins anymore.
The ability to interface with DuckDuckGo's Mail-Forwarding-API has further increased the control of my data in a very convenient way!
The only thing I miss from KeePass is the ability to auto-type inside of other applications besides the browser, but hey, that's not too much of an issue.
I'm probably an ignorant paranoid about them, I know I should google a bit of them, but instead I'm going for the ol' trusty ask the community.
Do they save your passwords locally or in the cloud? If locally, what if I want to sign in in another device? What if I lose the device I have my passwords on? What if they hack my device? If in the cloud: How can I know the service is not stealing my information? If I can access it anywhere, wouldn't that mean it also needs a password? Wouldn't that make it twice as unsafe as it would only take one password to access the rest?
Edit: Damn, I got extremely useful answers, I'm starting to like lemmy!